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Fortin Racing is Ready for Lake Elsinore

There’s just a few days before Rounds 3 & 4 of Lucas Oil Off-Road Racing in Lake Elsinore, California. We know teams are scrambling to get ready, but we stopped by to pay an impromptu visit to General Tire racer Doug Fortin and catch his truck being prepped for this weekend’s races. Pulling up to Fortin Racing in El Cajon, California, it’s easy to see that this is a first-class operation. Coming into the front door, a 7-pound attack dog greets your ankles—the family pet of the Fortins. This is not just a race shop; This is Doug Fortin’s place of business and where he spends a good deal of his time. Fortin Racing has become one of the leading manufacturers of drivetrain components for both short-course and desert race trucks, and it has turned into a full-time job for Doug Fortin, who took the torch passed on by his father, Doug Fortin Sr.

Let’s rewind a bit to the mid-1980s. Doug (Jr.) was a year away from getting his driver’s license, and he was about to enter his first race at Riverside International Raceway. He was young, but his father had raced off-road and on drag strips throughout the ‘60s and ‘70s and built transmissions for off-road racers at night while working a day job on the local naval base. He was familiar with the territory and prepared for this moment as much as any teenager could be. But he could not have known that this was the start of a successful racing career (and ultimately business) based on racing and a life-long informal education his father had bestowed upon him.

The racing bug caught on quickly. By 1987, the father-and-son team decided to campaign a Super 1600 car in the Mickey Thompson stadium series and would do so for a few years. At the same time, young Doug was also racing in the desert, and doing a danged good job of it. In 1988, he was honored as Rookie of the Year—the same year he graduated high school. In 1991 after winning the Baja1000 and Baja 500, he was voted Driver of the Year. From here on out Doug raced primarily in the desert, winning the Baja five times in his class. He’d go on to get a job at an engineering firm and continue racing in the desert until around 2003, when his father’s drivetrain side business grew to be too large for a garage. Fortin Racing had come up with the first sequential five-speed transmission for a Dakar race vehicle, and things were going to get busy. Doug (Jr.) started working with the gearboxes full-time, found a shop big enough to handle the workload, and built Fortin Racing into what it is today. In 2005, he acquired a CNC and machining business, eventually moving them in-house to produce the parts necessary for his gearboxes, power steering racks, hubs, and other products made by Fortin Racing. When they built a Pro buggy in 2007 with their sequential transmission, it was outlawed after the first season for being too much of an advantage. They were definitely onto something. In 2009, Fortin Racing designed a four-speed sequential transmission for Pro 2 trucks, and later for 4WD Pro 4 trucks. It would change the way racers spec’ed their vehicles from here on out. These days, Fortin Racing transmissions, steering racks, hubs, and front differentials can be found on a multitude of short-course a desert racing vehicles in various off-road racing circuits. And for the Fortins, part of running a successful race component shop is to continue proving the parts in their own race vehicles. Doug (Jr.) continues to compete off-road, currently in the Lucas Oil Off Road Racing Series in a Pro 4 truck outfitted, of course, with every component they make.

If you’re in the area, come down to Lake Elsinore this weekend to cheer on Doug Fortin and the rest of the General Tire sponsored racers as they compete in Rounds 3 & 4 of Lucas Oil Off Road Racing!